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Little Fugue
by Robert Anderson

Little Fugue Cover

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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Acclaimed short-story writer and winner of the Flannery O’Connor Award, Robert Anderson has written a brilliantly inventive first novel — a book that blends the facts of a famous writer’s life with the profound effect of her death on an entire generation.

Sylvia Plath’s legacy inspires, harrows, and haunts the three people at the center of Little Fugue: her husband, the poet Ted Hughes, freed by her death and then imprisoned by her myth; Assia Gutmann Wevill, Plath’s rival and Hughes’s mistress, who kills herself only six years after Plath; and Robert Anderson, a young New York writer, who is obsessed with Plath’s poems and her suicide, which “forged my identity and, incidentally, ruined my life.”

Their lives intersect, transiently and directly, through some of the more dramatic social upheavals of the past decades: the ’68 student riots, the drug-addled seventies, the AIDS crisis of the eighties, the cataclysm of 9/11.

Little Fugue crackles with wit and verbal dexterity. There have been many accounts of the Plath/Hughes drama, but author Robert Anderson provides a fresh, utterly convincing interpretation of events. This is a brilliant novel of artists caught between the erotic allure of extinction and the eternal power of poetry.

Review:

"The Plath/Hughes story has been told and retold almost to death, but Flannery O'Connor Award — winner Anderson (The Ice Age) breathes brash new life into the iconic tale in this hypnotic and provocative novel. Anderson chronicles the aftermath of Plath's 1963 suicide from the perspective of real and fictional characters, notably Columbia-educated fiction writer Robert Anderson, who is forever changed by reading the Ariel poems. To him, Plath is untouchable, the sacrificial Joan of Arc. His Plath-infused account of social and political turmoil in New York from the Columbia riots of 1968 to September 11, 2001, is counterpointed by the story of Ted Hughes and his mistress, Assia Gutmann Wevill. Although Anderson makes it keenly obvious that he favors Plath, and he will ruffle plenty of feathers with his blunt partisanship ('What a bleak, anticlimactic, eschatological PR caper that Birthday Letters charade made for.... Ted made his last buck'), Ted is artfully portrayed as a man who felt he never really knew his wife. Assia, meanwhile, is the half-good poet who covets Plath's identity and ends up sharing her fate. Anderson's writing is electric, irreverent and erudite. The novel's only flaw is the erratic fugue between the masterful Plath/Assia/Ted passages and the sometimes convoluted Robert sections; Robert as character is occasionally subsumed by the character of New York, and the fundamental connection between Plath and her young acolyte is lost. Still, this is a fiercely imaginative effort, in which Anderson connects the intricate psychology of his characters with their art and the world around them. Agent, Ian Kleinert. (Dec. 28) Forecast: Anderson's lack of piety — some might call it lack of respect — for his real-life protagonists will make this a controversial book; the quality of the writing will make it a novel to be reckoned with." Publishers Weekly (Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Review:

"A beautiful and breathtaking book. From the seeds of Sylvia Plath?s haunted life, Robert Anderson has crafted a soulful, passionate, and profound novel — a deeply moving meditation on the chains of love and art and history that bind us all together." Dan Chaon, author of You Remind Me of Me and Among the Missing

Review:

"Little Fugue finds the truth of Sylvia Plath where no biography has looked?deep in the character of her times and in the souls of those close to her, and most thrillingly in the heart of a young reader coping in the wild corridors of New York City as the legend?s life comes crashing down. Robert Anderson is an original, a new master with new tools: poignant wit, precarious structure, controlled obsession, mysterious clarity, a certain cynical warmth. He can tell a story, too, and this one — a love story without parallel?will lay you flat." Bill Roorbach, author of Big Bend and The Smallest Color

Review:

A singular book about a singular woman, and the way her life and death rippled through the lives of those around her. Anderson imagines us a Plath every bit as real, desperate, and turbulent as Michael Cunningham?s Virginia Woolf; and, if anything, Little Fugue digs even deeper than The Hours to unearth the poetic truth about the characters who inhabit it." D. B. Weiss, author of Lucky Wander Boy

Review:

"A serious book rich with writing and imaginative power. In this book about love and desire, Anderson confronts the complexities that lie within his characters." George Braziller

About the Author

Robert Anderson was born in Rapid City, South Dakota, in 1964. He grew up outside of Minneapolis and attended the University of Minnesota. He came to New York in 1986 and lived for many years in Times Square residential hotels–the Vigilant, the Woodward, and the St. James–while working as a cook and writing. His first book, the short-story collection Ice Age, won the University of Georgia Press’s Flannery O’Connor Award in 2000.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780345454102
Author:
Anderson, Robert
Publisher:
Ballantine Books
Subject:
Literary
Subject:
Married people
Subject:
Americans
Publication Date:
December 2004
Binding:
Hardcover
Language:
English
Pages:
384
Dimensions:
9.58x6.64x1.35 in. 1.42 lbs.